US plans Japan anti-missile base, neo-militarists pleased
Voice of America reports June 26 that the US will be deploying Patriot missile batteries in Japan under an agreement reached May 1 in response to the supposed threat from North Korea. AFP adds that the US Missile Defence Agency has confirmed that a Forward Based X-band Transportable (FBX-T) radar station is to built at an air base near the village of Shariki, opposite North Korea in northeastern Japan. It is part of a network of "forward-deployed missile defence sensors" that also includes US Aegis destroyers.
In news which is not as unrelated as we would like to think, Japan's judiciary has turned down a legal challenge to the prime minister's visits to the Yasukuni Shrine, where convicted World War II war criminals are honored. From BBC, June 24:
Japan's highest court has rejected an attempt to stop Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi's visits to the controversial Yasukuni Shrine in Tokyo.
Mr Koizumi has made five visits to the shrine where Japan's war dead are honoured since taking office in 2001.
His visits have angered neighbouring countries, which say the shrine glorifies Japan's militaristic past.
The shrine honours 2.5m Japanese who died in military service, including criminals executed for war crimes.
Unconstitutional?
The relatives of some of those who died in World War II, from Japan, China and South Korea, tried to argue that the prime minister's visits to the Yasukuni shrine caused them psychological distress.
They asked the court to rule whether Mr Koizumi's first visit five years ago was unconstitutional, violating the division between state affairs and religion.
On that occasion, he arrived in an official car, accompanied by staff, and signed the visitors book as prime minister.
The court did not address that issue, but the judge said that whilst people might feel upset about Mr Koizumi's visits, it did not mean they could claim damages from him, and he threw out the lawsuit.
Over the years there have been a number of similar legal challenges in the lower courts.
For the most part, attempts to win compensation have failed and the issue of constitutionality has been side-stepped.
Mr Koizumi, whose term of office will soon be over, made a promise to visit the shrine every year before he became prime minister.
While the visits anger China and South Korea, they play well with some of his supporters at home.
He is widely expected to visit one last time before he steps down in September.
Whether wittingly or not, the US re-militarization of Japan is playing into the hands of the fast-growing historical revisionism and fascism-nostalgia in the island nation.
See our last posts on Japan and the North Korea crisis
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